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Penguins GM wouldn’t mind if Fleury takes Olympic snub personally

Boston Bruins v Pittsburgh Penguins - Game Two

PITTSBURGH, PA - JUNE 03: Marc-Andre Fleury #29 of the Pittsburgh Penguins lets in a goal by Johnny Boychuk #55 of the Boston Bruins in the third period during Game Two of the Eastern Conference Final of the 2013 NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs at the Consol Energy Center on June 3, 2013 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The Bruins defeated the Penguins 6-1. (Photo by Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

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When Team Canada announced its list of players invited to their orientation camp, five goaltenders were included and none of them were Penguins netminder Marc-Andre Fleury.

It looks like after years of struggling in the playoffs, his country has serious concerns about how he might perform internationally.

“The Olympic thing, I’m not going to make too much of,” Penguins GM Ray Shero told the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. “But if he takes something personal, good for him.”

Being excluded from orientation camp doesn’t necessarily mean that Fleury won’t make the team, but he’ll have a particularly tough time. After all, if his performance in the playoffs is truly the problem, then that might be an unsolvable issue because he won’t get another shot at postseason redemption until after the Olympics.

Fleury might get off to a strong start in 2013-14, but his regular season performance has been adequate to great over the last few years anyways.

“The playoffs are the question mark he’s had the past four years,” Shero said. “I think it’s probably something on his mind.”

Perhaps Fleury will take the snub personally and that will be the motivation he needs going forward, even if it might be too late at this point for him to earn an Olympic spot.